Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, March 21, 1902, Image 3
lumn A Little Cirl'ii Story. To take her nap, I put my <loll In grandpa's garden chair. The robins fouua. her right away, And tried to steal her hair. Thoy pulled so hard she sat right np, And opened wide her eyes. Those foolish things supposed 'twas me, And hopped oil in surprise. And then it was I found their nest: They were so droll, you see, As up they ilow, nud down they flew, Glancing sideways at me. But now they know me very well, And eat the food I bring. "Cheer up! Cheer up! Cheer up! Chee, chee!" Is w hut they say anil sing. .J —Christina Register. i Tlie Wooflclinck. H. D. Reed and Verne Morton, in ■:i country Life in America, tell an inter esting and pictorial story of the wood chuck, or ground hog. "Perhaps no wild mammal," says Mr. Reed, "is more familiar to coun try people that the woodehuck. Every uillside and meadow is dotted with the small piles of cartli which mark the doorway to his home. The wood chuck prefers a hillside or a knoll iu which to dig his hole, for here he can easily make the end of his den higher than the beginning, thus avoiding the danger of being drowned out. "What could be more unlike In gen eral appearance than a woodehuck and a squirrel? Yet they are cousins, both beiong to the same family of mammals. The trim body, sharp claws and agility of the squirrels make It possible for them to lead an arboreal life, jumping recklessly from branch to branch, F while the flabby form and short legs \ of the woodehuck better adapt him for digging than for running or climbing. "The nature of the food of the wood chuck is such that he cannot lay up stores as the chipmunks do, nor is it of such a kind that it can be obtained during the winter. The case of this creature during the winter seems to be, therefore, one of sleep long and soundly or starve. During ths win ter's sleep or hibernation, life pro cesses go on very slowly. Breathing s reduced, and the heart beats become so slow and feeble that they cannot be felt. They come from their winter's sleep about the first of March, iu New York. Vlow Kifpliant Seal* Live. rtiose curious animals the elephant seals, also known as sea elephants, have been recently studied by Profes sor 0. Chun, a German scientist, .13 well as by Robert Hall, a well known naturalist, and as a result many new tacts have been gathered in regard to their life and habits. These seals are only to be found in the southern seas, and mainly in the vicinity of the Kergueles islands, where they go in August for the pur pose of pairing. They remain there until February or March. During the winter they are very dull and apathet ic. but as spring approaches they be come more lively. Mr. Hall says that be went several times through a herd •f 40 or 50 animals while they were dozing, and only a few were disturbed by him. These seals livo in communities, and In a single bay may often be seen from sto 10 colonies. Hitherto it has been supposed that there Is never more than one male in a single herd, but there now seems to be abundant proof that each herd contains scais of only one sex. Thus, in one bay there will re Ave or six herds of males, and in an other five or six herds of females. Professor Chun, who has studied the M seals thoroughly in their native haunts, C says that for a long time after the animals return to the Kergueles in the autumn they do not take any food but remain torpid In beds which they form until they have shed their old hair and put on a new eoat. During the winter he saw several seals killed, and not a particle of food was found in their stomachs. Mr. Hall, on the other hand, says that the seals during this period feed once a day, going down to the water to obtain a supply of fish. In any case. It Is certain that these animals can live without food tor a long time, since they have under their skin a layer of fat which Is 15 centimetres in thickness. Bow (ho Reavor Rreatlion In Winter. "The beaver is really a sort of port able pulp mill, grinding up most any kind of wood that comes his way. I f once measured a white birch tree, 22 at inches through, cut down by a beav * er. A single heaver, generally. If not always, amputates the tree, and when It comes down the whole family fall to and have a regular frolic with the hark and branches. A big beaver will bring down a fair sized sapling—say three Inches through—ln about two minutes, and a large tree in about an hour. "One of the queerest facts about the heaver Is the rapidity with which his long, chisel shaped teeth recover from an injury. I have known beavers to break their teeth in biting a trap, and when I caught them again 10 days afterward you couldn't see a sign of the break —the teeth had grown out to their former perfection in that short period. "As compared with the otter or mink the beaver is a very slow swimmer. His front legs hang by his sides, and he nses oniy his webbed hind feet for ' v purposes of swimming. It Is easy ■to capture one in a canoe If you can rfind him in shoal water. He Is a most '* determined fighter, but clumay and easy to handle. If he could get hold of you with his teeth he would almost take a leg off, so you want to watch him sharply. The place to grab him is by the tail. "The ability of a beaver to remain under water for a long time is really not so tough a problem as it looks. When the lake or pond is frozen over a beaver will come to the under sur face of the ice and expel his breath, so that it will form a wide, flat bub ble. The air, coming in contact with the ice and water, is purified, and the beaver breathes it again. This opera tion he can repeat several times. The I otter and muskrat do the same thing. "It almost takes a burglar proof safe to hold a newly captured beaver. I once caught an old one and two kit tens up the north branch of the Sou- West, put them in a barrel and brought them down to Miramichi lake. That night she knawed a hole through the barrel and cleared out, leaving her kit tens. They were so young that I had no way of feeding them, so I released them. Soon after that I caught a big male beaver. I made a large log pen for him of dry spruce, but the second night he cut a log and disappeared. "Beavers, when alarmed, generally make up stream, so I went to the brook where a little branch came in, and I thought I would go up that a little way, and I hadn't gone more than 10 rods before I came across my lad sit ting up in the bed of the brook hav ing a lunch on a stick he had cut. He actually looked as if he knew he was playing truant when he caught sight of me out of the side of his eye. "I picked him up by the tail, brought ~.m back, put him in the pen, supplied him with plenty of fresh poplar, and he seemed as tame as possible and never gave me any more trouble. I brought him out to Stanley, where he lived a long time. Turnbull had a. mongrel dog, which was jealous of the beaver, and one day attacked him. He did that only once, for the beaver nipped the dog's tail off Quieker'n a cat would catch a mouse."—Rod and Gun. Tlie Dieeontenfe<l <;**€. Once upon a time a flock of wild geese started outtoseethesights. They were led by an old goose who, no doubt thought she was very wise. As if any body ever did see a wise goose. "I'm going out," she said, "to see more of the world. We really know nothing of what is going on outside of this pond. Don't you find it very dull? Only last week a swallow pausing in his flight to have a bit of conversation with me, told of the won derful things to be seen. If you care to come along." she added, "I shall take you with me." Now, to tell the truth, the young geese, one and all, were perfectly do lighted at the proposition (because that dangerous little seed of discontent had already taken root). Such a cackle as they set up Cackle! cackle! cackle! cackle!. So they flew away over brown marshes and green meadows, over rivulets and s'reams, until they came to such a lovely place where there were beautiful flowers and trees. There were rustic bridges spanning limpid streams, and last, but not least, a beautiful pond. "How lovely!" they exclaimed in one breath. "I wonder where we are," said one little goose. "This," said their leader with an air of importance, '"ls Central Park. My friend, the swallow, told me all about it." Anu sure enough, it was Central Park, down by the duck pond, where, no doubt, you have walked many and many a time. "The ducks and geese you see swim ming about," said the old goose, "are tame. Ilow beautifully they behave. It all depends," quoth she, "on one's bringing up. Hush, my dears," as the young geese, one and all, began to cackle. "Don't be rude! Let me, I beg of you, speak to our friends." The tame geese, however, were not in the least inclined to be sociable. They glided about majestically, quite ignoring the presence of the intruders. "See that pretty little house over there?" said the little goose. "Can it be possible that it has been built for our accommodation?" How absurd this was. Of course your mamma has a room set apart as a guest chamber, and these ridiculous little geese thought the duck house had been especially built for them, just like invited guests, you know. "To be sure," said the old goose, shaking the water from her back, "my friend, Mr. Swallow, must have told them we were coming." She waddled over, followed by the entire flock. Hardly had they entered the duck house when they heard a click. The spring door closed with a. snap and lo! they were prisoners Just then the keeper came out. "Heigh-ho!" ex claimed he; "what's this? A flock of wild geese, on my life. Come here, Bill (to a great, sturdy fellow near by). Here is work for you to do. Clip the wings of these geese as once." The man went to work and did as he was (old, clipping all their wings, while a big park policeman looked on and laughed. The geese were then let out on the pond to swim about majestically like their neighbors. Oh! how they longed to fly home. Never before did freedom seem so dear to them. "Why didn't you tell us," said the little goose in tone of reproach to one of her new found triends, "that we were going to have our wings clipped?' "Because," replied her companion, "you wouldn't have believed us; and alter all, my dear, experience is th 6 very best teacher."—New Idea Maga zine. Australia has more than 1000 news papers. LICHTNINC ROWS. A Recent Illscusslon of Tlielr Value by Knclisli KnglneeiA. At the annual meeting of the Brit ish Association for the Advancement ol Science in Glasgow last month, the engineering section listened to a paner on lightning rods contributed by Kil lingworth Hedges. He described the rods in use on St. Paul's ct thedral in London, which, though erected less than 30 years ago, had been found to be defective. He had himself planned the rearrangement and also one for Westminster abbey. The conditions prevailing in big cities are somewhat different from those in rural districts, perhaps, but the fact that expert? still consider lightning rods are necessary in the one justifies faith in their utili ty in the other, especially if rightly constructed. Mr. Hedges said that on St. Paul' 3 cathedral the number of ordinary con ductors from air to earth had been greatiy increased; and, besides these, horizontal cables were run on the ridges of the roofs and in other prom inent positions so as to encircle the building, being interconnected to tlio vertical conductors wherever they cross one another. The horizontal ca bles were furnished at intervals with aigrettes, or spikes, which were invish hie from the ground level, and de signed to give many points of dis charge. At the same time they, in ronjunction with the cables, should re ceive any side flash which might oc cur should any portion of the building receive a direct stroke of lightning. The unreliability of soldered points for conductors, whether of cable or tape, led the author to design a special joint box. Owing to the difficulty of sinking an earth plate of sufficient area, on ac count of old foundations at St. Paul's, a tubular earth had been designed. He had recommended keeping the conductor away from the building,be cause that was the plan followed on the continent, where lightning storms were much more frequent than in Eng land. It was very difficult, in follow ing the shape of the building, to avoid corners and sharp turns, which would prevent the current from following tho conductor. In a case in which a chim ney had been struck at Wallsend, the lightning went to the chimney first, then to the conductor, and after that back again to the chimney, knocking part of it down. Ho had preferred round rods to flat strips on the author ity of Dr. Oliver Lodge; and agreed that architects might get puzzled if first one thing were recommended and then anotner. He would, however, prefer not to lay down any rules as absolutely definite until more results were brought in from various persons who were making observations all over tho country. It was In order to get these data that the lightning commit tee had been constituted. Rnrbnr'i Fashion I'lntna. Barbers, like tailors, have fashion plates, and in various suburban shops the latest, plates upon the ways to wear the hair are now pasted up. The October plate devotes itself to six styles, the legal, the medical, the French, the professor, the student and the business man. The pictures are Interesting. The legal style shows a smooth shaven young man with his hair cut very short and parted and brushed n in a smooth, lustrous wing over either temple. The medical pic ture is of a foolish looking person with an immense nose and with light hair parted on the side and brushed far back off the brow. The French shows a yoqth with his hair a mass of small corkscrew curls. The student has long hair, parted in the middle and smoothed down almost to his eye brows. The professor has what is called a round cut, his locks, that is to say, end at a certain point on his neck in a rounded mass, and beneath this mass the shaved neck of the pro fessor looks very white and clean. The business man, according to the fashion plate, wears his hair short at the back and sides and long on the top of his head, and his parting is In the middle, this arrangement mak ing a kind of scallop or double semi circle of hair upon his forehead. "What kind of a cut will you have, sir?" the suburban barbers' now say. "Shall it be medical, legal, student, French or what?" And they point with their combs at the fashion plate and wait blandly for the customer's reply.— Philadelphia Record. Old Niime* for Gnn*. As the use of artillery became mor# common and the advantages of porta bility and a greater rapidity of fire were recognized, guns, except among the Orientals, became smaller, but of better workmanship and construction. Inventors began to try their hands at all sorts of improvements or at tempts at improvement, and in the course of a hundred years or so the number of different pieces of cannon, large and small, muzzle or breech load ing, was simply legion. There were cannon, cannon royal, and deml can non. three or four classes of culverins, bombards, mortars, perriers, serpen tines, carthouns, curtails, passevo lants or zebratanas, basilisks, orgues, sakers, minions, mojancs, falcons and falconets, robinets, fowlers, bases, slings, port-pieces, murderers, drakes, aspics, double dogs and iagtors, to say nothing of ribad / ilns, flying dragons and partridge mortars.—Gentleman's Magazine. A fr*t BIItnk>. The late Lord Morris did not gain a very favorable Impression of the house of lords A'nin he made his first speech there. When asked how he hud got on, he replied; "Well, I made wan mis take. I should have practised spakin' to a lot of gravestones before I ad dressed their 10rrf"h<ps." | Civilization of the Crowa. The Crow Indians, once the terror of the plains, are now scheduled as among the most industrious and pros perous Indians in the country. There are about two thousand of them on the Crow reservation In Montana, and they have been reported at Washing ton as "self-sustaining." There are gradations of worthlessness even among the savages, and the Crows were more energetic in their wild life than were many of the other tribes, and especially those of the Const. It Is not surprising, therefore, that they are more energetic In semi-civil ized life than the others and are ready sooner to dispense with government rations. Vubli to StUDil For Months Becauso ol Sprained Ankles. CUIIED BY ST. JACOBS OIL. (From tho Cardiff Times.) Among the thousands of voluntary endorse ments of the great value of St. .Ta *obs Oil foi sprains, stiffness, and soreness, is that of Mrs. G. Thomas, 4 Alexandra Road, Gelli, Ysbrod, near Pontypridd, South Wales, who Fays:— "It is with great pleasure that I add my will ing testimony to the imaluuble excellence of your celebrated St. Jacobs Oil, as experienced In my own case. I sprained both my ankles in walking down some steps so severely that I was unable to stand for several months. The pain I suffered was most severe, and nothing that I used helped me until I applied Bt. Jacobs Oil, when they immediately became better daily, and in a short time I was able to go about, and soon after I was quite cured. I am now determined to advise all persons suf | fering from pains to use this wonderful rem edy, which did so much for me." Mrs. Thomas does not enlighten us as to what treatment she pursued during the months sho was unable to. stand, and during which time she was suffering so much, but we venture to suggest that had she called in any well known medical man he would have at once have prescribed St. Jacobs Oil, for it has conquered pain upwards of fifty years, and doctors know there is nothing so good. Ths proprietors of St. Jacobs Oil have been award ed twelve gold medals by dlfforent interna tional exhibitions AS the premier pain-killing remedy of the world. The committees who made the awards were in eaoh instance com posed largely of the most eminent medical men obtainable. Mrs. Thomas evidently did not know tho high opinion in which St. Jacob 8 Oil is held by almost every progressive med ical man. When one woman makes a formal call on another woman she seldom stays more than fifteen minues, ten of which she con sumes in saying good-bye. Beit For th Bowels. No matter what alls von, i jadaohe to a cancer, you will never get well until your bowels are put right, (,'ASCARF.TS help nature, euro you without a gripe or paiu, produos easy natural movements, cost you Just 11 cents to start getting your health bask. CAS CABZTS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal boxes, every tablet has C. 0. 0. stamped on it. Beware or imitations. Men as well as clocks are known by j their works. FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous- ! nessafter first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great ' Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free I Dr. B. H. KLIMP., Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila. Pa. ! Some people never attempt to do any thing for fear they might do it wrong. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, oures wind colic. 25oabottle. The worst thing about life insurance is that we never live to enjoy it. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible j medicine for coughs and colds.—N. W. Samukl, I Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. It's the dull fellow who is generally the i greatest bore- GerNU >' ; A cts Pleasantly, r M / cts Ber\eficiaJly; / A c ts-tr\ily as a Laxative,. ' <4-,,/ ' lift -v/ / Syrup of Figs appeals to the cultured and Ihe y , • Y//' •/-/' •' / well-informed and to the healthy, because its com >"( O/A '- 's' "*"■ ' / ponent parts are simple and wholesome and be cause it acts without disturbing the natural func- tions > as jt is wholly free from every objectionable quality or substance. In the process of KfX ' jw, manufacturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but the medicinal i\ y irtues of Sy ru P of Figs are obtained %) from an excellent combination of plants m sW'Z . known to be medicinally laxative and to I /fS -SfZ"-A act most beneficially. ' tw j' Wii To . R et its beneficial effects—buy the V'Vy '"\ genuine—manufactured by the (AlJfOßrfl A fwyßlJ P ( ... .Ser\ FVek.r\cißco, Cel. i-ou.sville, Ky. new York.N.Y. -•—Ttiiiiff For al, by all Price, fifty cer\ta per bottle. PRINCESS VIROQUA, M. D. Endorses Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound After Following Its Eccord For Years. "DEAR MRS. PINKIIAM:—ITcaIth is the greatest boon bestowed ou human ity and therefore anything that can restore lost health is a blessing. I consider Lydia E. Pinkhum's Veg etable Compound as a blessing to State and Nation. It cures her moth ers and daughters and makes them well and strong. TO Practicing Physician ami Lecturer. "For fifteen years I have noted the effect of your Vegetable Compound in curing special diseases of women. "1 know of nothing superior for ovarian trouble, barrenness, and it has prevented hundreds of dangerous operations where physicians claimed it was the only chance to get well. Ulceration and inflammation of the womb has been cured in two or three weeks through its use, and as I find it purely an horbal remedy, I unhesitat ingly give it my highest endorsement. —Fraternally j'ours, DR. P. VIROQUA, Lansing, Mich."— s6ooo forfeit If above tes timonial Is not genuine. If you are ill do not hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound at once, and write to Mrs. Pink ham at Lynn, Mass. for special odvlco; it is entirely free. ■How toGet "Rich A boolt of lfO ]ingpßwiltton by n business man of 60 yours mpoilence. who lias msilofortunes mud come In contact with most of the rich insn of the country. Especially for boys and young men—yet thousands of older tnen read It. YOU become successful by lollotvliiedlrecltonß. Mailed on receipt of price # 1.1 0 casb or inoney order. Agents selling tbem fust. <l. S. F. 61. 80OP1K1.11. If linkers, ATLANTA, tIEORGI A. I l>* It/On Douglas os 3 W^ltoe^lorsfy l. "on?f^uiu"^'eaVl?a^x I mamtalneS l^ecMllMl lua r l ,ul ation fo r tile shoes B ,j w Sold p M Douglas Sjoret m American cities setting direct from factory to 1 W L. DOUGLAS Vfe® 522 SHOES 5 22 JCSsa rMnmaHMMMHHaiBB 9-1.00 4 ■ 11 1 Kdge L UNION MADE * *> , Line Cannot Be Equaled at Any Price. i,if? e et ta ? ,1!^ S ft l wa y l>aen placed bo high that the wearer receives more value for his money nnraVnn ,i •?" '!" B, °? am * R,lp than lie ran net elßewhPre. W. I . Douglas makes and sells mure 9.i.uu aim >j.uO shoes than any other two manufacturers in the world. Fast Color Eyelets Used. . Douglas 93.00 and 93.50 shoes nromnde of the same high-grade ft,? leather* usod in 95.00 and 90.00 shoos and are just ns good in every way. on bottom P °si ' mv ' npf Douglas shoes with name and price stnmped^9to|^~M T. Inpn '"tr*iiienta"o.' foot as show'/: size and ' f ; 'Jg CATALOG ain ° r ° ai> tOG 5 hCßVT ' l,,edlum or "# ht "o l ® B - ■>. AJ V V W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, , {J3.K> 27.r TA. 3:L,&■ Sizes 2ixs and 3x6 Ft. Weight 28 and 39 lbs. NO NEF.OP A HPIXI AI. ROOM; place on dining or library table or the fold ing Ntand; set away on side or end. Very strongly made, mahogany frame handsome ly finished; In best cjUHlity I>HIIM ami -i iin est cues with table; patent imlestructible cushions; pockets Book of rules for many other arumes. Fully asd'sirable a table for home entertaining ns one costing ten times the ori.e. Admits of b lentiflo playing. SENT ON iKI AI. Des -ription and colored plates FREE on re quest. Write for local agents' addresses. THE E. T. BUKKOWES 135 Spriim Street, Portland, lie. New York, 277 Hroadwav. San Francisco, 402 Itattery St. Capsicum Vaseline Put up In Collapsible Tubes. A Substitute for and Superior to Musts;,l or any other plaster, and will not blister the most delicaie skin. The pain allaying and curative qua'ities of this article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve headache and sciatica. We reoommend It as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all r lieu malic, neuralgic and gouty c <mplaints. A trial will prove what we claim for It, and it will be found to be invaluable in the household. Many people say "It Is the best of all your preparations." Price, 15 cents, at all druggists, or other dealer* or by sending this amount to us In postage stamp* we will send you a tube by mall. *o article should be accepted by tho public unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine. CHEESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING CO., 17 State Street, New York City. DROPSYSSIS^ Cf>e§- Book of testimonial* and lOdnva' t> eat meat Frew. Dr. H. H. OREEMB SOUS, BOX B. Atlanta, (in, r N u 50, 'oi yj g®